Amsterdam - More than half of Dutch nationals want their
country's military mission to Afghanistan to end after August 1,
2008. A similar amount wants the mission to end immediately.
The findings, published on Friday in daily Algemeen Dagblad,
result from a survey performed by the polling agency De Vos & Jansen.
Among the 1,000 people polled, only 45 per cent support the
mission. Most people question its usefulness. A minority of 45.6 per
cent support extending the mission beyond August 1, 2008.
For two-thirds of the people polled, the death of Dutch soldiers
is not the main reason to withdraw support for the military mission.
Instead, the survey appears to indicate the Dutch are not happy
with the fact their military are spending most of their time on war
activities and less on rebuilding civil society in Oruzgan.
Before the military mission started in August 2006, the government
presented the mission to the Dutch electorate as a way to help the
Afghan people rebuild their country.
Politicians promised that military activity would remain minimal.
The main focus, they said, would be on restoring infrastructure and
creating the circumstances for the Afghans to rebuild civil society.
The survey published on Friday was performed before the 10th Dutch
soldier died on Sunday.
The body of the soldier, 30-year-old sergeant Martijn Rosier,
arrived in the Netherlands late Thursday night. He was flown to the
military airport in Enschede in the eastern Netherlands.
His body was transferred to his family after a short military
ceremony at the airport.
Some 1,665 Dutch troops are stationed in the province of Oruzgan
as part of a larger NATO mission to Afghanistan. The mission, which
began last year, was originally due to continue for two years.
The Dutch government wants other NATO members to take over the
command in Oruzgan after August 2008. The Netherlands recently
repeated its formal request to Norway to take over the mission next
year.
However, neither Norway nor other countries have expressed an
interest to replace the Dutch.
The Dutch government is expected to decide about a possible
extension of the mission no later than September.
© 2007 dpa - Deutsche Presse-Agentur
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